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Deontay Wilder on Anthony Joshua: As long as we’re both active, we must meet

Deontay Wilder has said he would still like to face Anthony Joshua.There was a spell when the fight seemed close when both were unbeaten heavyweight titlists. However, the mouthwatering showdown between the Englishman and the outspoken puncher from Alabama never happened.

Now, Wilder, 44-4-1 (43 KOs), is 40 and Joshua, 29-4 (26 KOs) are potentially lined up for a 2026 showdown. Joshua last night knocked out Jake Paul in six rounds and then called out Tyson Fury in the aftermath. Victory for Joshua there and Wilder could conceivably follow.

Another tune-up for Joshua was planned for February; followed by another long-awaited bout, Tyson Fury, which – like the one with Wilder – is well past the best possible date.

“Almost definitely. Hands down. I’m a fighter,” Wilder told BoxingScene, asked whether he’d entertain a fight with the 35-year-old Joshua. “He’s a fighter. I’m still active. He’s still active. And that’s one of the biggest fights people still want to see. You know what I mean? 

“That’s a big fight people still want to see. And like I said, we both are still in this business. And so as long as we’re still in this business, we must meet.”

Wilder turned pro after capturing a bronze medal at the Beijing Olympics in 2008. Joshua turned over after capturing gold four years later in London.

It seemed like they might fight heading into Joshua’s bout with Andy Ruiz in 2019, but Ruiz sprung an upset. Joshua took the rematch, two months before Wilder fell to Fury in their February 2020 rematch to end his WBC title reign.

“Usyk Gets the Green Light” – WBC Clears Heavyweight Champion for Voluntary Defense as Deontay Wilder Fight Looms 

Oleksandr Usyk has been granted the opportunity to make a voluntary defence of his WBC heavyweight title after saying he wanted to fight Deontay Wilder next.

Unified heavyweight champion Usyk said this week that Wilder was his “first option” for his next fight.

Wilder is not ranked in the WBA, WBC or IBF’s top 10, meaning Usyk may have to vacate some of his titles to fight him.

But the WBC announced at their annual convention that they would not immediately call a mandatory defence for the Ukrainian for their belt, opening the door for a world title fight between the pair.

“Heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk can make a voluntary defence. He’s already said he would like to fight Deontay Wilder,” a WBC statement said.

Usyk last fought in July when he stopped Londoner Daniel Dubois in round five to become two-time undisputed heavyweight champion.

But in November, the 38-year-old decided to relinquish his WBO title, elevating Britain’s Fabio Wardley to heavyweight champion.

At the time, Usyk informed the WBO he would not be proceeding with a mandatory title defence against Wardley.

READ MORE :“I Was Pushed to the Edge” — Anthony Joshua breaks

Usyk remains the WBA, IBF and WBC heavyweight champion.

Anthony Joshua

The WBC also confirmed that a potential fight between British boxers Lawrence Okolie and Moses Itauma would determine the next mandatory challenger for the WBC belt.

Both fighters already have bouts scheduled, with Itauma fighting Jermaine Franklin on 24 January in Manchester and Okolie boxing in Nigeria later this month against a yet-to-be announced opponent.

Several other Britons could also put themselves into world title contention next year, with a potential bout between Joshua Buatsi and Ben Whittaker expected to determine the next mandatory challenger at light heavyweight.

Britain’s Conor Benn was also named the number one challenger for Mario Barrios’ WBC welterweight world title.

The WBC has stripped Terrence Crawford of his super-middleweight belt, saying the American hasn’t paid his past two sanctioning fees and calling it a “slap in the face”.

Crawford remains the WBA ‘Super’, WBO and IBF super-middleweight champion.

If the last fight has already been fought, Terence Crawford’s greatness needs no further proof.

Terence “Bud” Crawford has always fought like a man who wanted to leave no room for argument. Not simply to win, but to win so cleanly that dissent collapses on contact. So his retirement announcement on Tuesday didn’t feel like a sudden fade-out so much as the closing of a file: tidy, decisive, signed in his own hand. Three months after scaling two weight divisions to outclass Canelo Álvarez in Las Vegas and become the undisputed super-middleweight champion, Crawford says he is stepping away “on his own terms”. In the cruellest sport, that is rarer than a perfect record.

Boxing is purpose-built to keep you in. To lure you back with one more payday, one more belt, one more chance to settle a score that only exists because the promoters or the public insist it should. The hurt business has never been conducive to happy endings. The preferred vernacular is violent or sad or compromised: a stoppage you don’t see coming, a dubious decision, a diminished version of yourself preserved forever in high definition.

The 38-year-old Crawford, undefeated in 42 professional fights with 31 wins by knockout, is leaving with no such asterisks. No late-career survival acts. No sense of erosion. He exits while still clearly the best fighter in the world – only Naoya Inoue and Oleksandr Usyk are in the conversation – fresh off the biggest win of his career, with opportunity still rapping loudly at the door.

Plenty of champions have gone out on top in theory. Very few have done so in practice when they’re at the height of their earning power. Almost none have done so like this: as the best pound-for-pound fighter alive, unchallenged across five weight classes, without a single fight that left observers leaning forward in the late rounds and wondering whether the moment had finally arrived. With no judge having even once scored in favour of an opponent during his career. Not Gene Tunney. Not Rocky Marciano. Not Lennox Lewis. Not Joe Calzaghe. Not Floyd Mayweather Jr. Not Andre Ward. With Crawford, the question was never if a fight would tilt, only when.

READ MORE :“There’s Way More Left” – Anthony Joshua Sends Powerful

Anthony Joshua

To tell his story properly, you have to start in Omaha, because Omaha never leaves the frame. The kid from North 33rd Street, where options narrowed early and the gym became a kind of moral architecture. Long before boxing gave Crawford a livelihood, it gave him a structure. Chin tucked. Hands high. Elbows in. Keep your word. He would switch stances from orthodox to southpaw just to see how it felt.

When he broke his right hand in a school fight, he kept showing up for training anyway, drilling left-handed until it felt natural. He never moved his centre of gravity to the coasts or reinvented himself as a brand. Even as the money started pouring in, Omaha remained home – a place he fought for, returned to and built around, even on the rare occasions it didn’t love him back.

There is also the moment that sounds like myth until you remember it happened to a real body in a real car: the 2008 dice game, the winnings accounted for, the gunshot through the rear window, the bullet grazing beneath his ear. Crawford drove himself to the hospital, recovered, and kept the course. In another fighter’s story, it would be assigned a deeper meaning. In his, it remains a prelude to the work ahead.

That work made him boxing’s most reliable problem-solver. Crawford didn’t overwhelm opponents immediately; he dismantled them methodically from an orthodox or southpaw stance with equal menace. He downloaded information in the early rounds, probed reactions with the jab, catalogued habits, then altered the geometry of the action. Angles shifted. Distance dissolved. Fights that appeared competitive early became organised, then inevitable. Opponents did not simply lose; they realised, gradually, that the room had been rearranged around them.

The titles followed as proof of concept. First at lightweight. Then 140lb, where he became the division’s first undisputed champion of the four-belt era. Then welterweight, where the long-awaited Errol Spence Jr fight ended not in drama but in demolition. Then higher still, until September’s victory over Canelo transformed the argument and lifted him from generational talent into the all-time realm of lionhearted weight-jumpers such as Harry Greb, Henry Armstrong, Roberto Durán and Manny Pacquiao.

RELATED NEWS:Chaos Outside the Ring: Terence Crawford Slammed With

By the end, the résumé read like a lockbox. Only the sixth male fighter in history to win world titles in five divisions, joining Thomas Hearns, Sugar Ray Leonard, Oscar De La Hoya, Mayweather and Pacquiao. Only the third to claim lineal championships in four, alongside Mayweather and Pacquiao. Only the second man to become an undisputed champion in three weight classes after Armstrong in 1938.

Terence Crawford

These feats once guaranteed household fame. Crawford accomplished them in an era fragmented by paywalls, promotional stalemates and the expectation that greatness must also arrive with theatrics attached. He refused that script. He trusted the older logic: keep winning, and eventually the world will have to reckon with you. Now it has. And he is leaving anyway.

That may be the most radical part of all. Many great champions walk away because they no longer want to suffer for their craft. Crawford does not look like a man escaping the grind. He looks like a man who has already finished the work. He leaves without visible decline, without a rival pressing him, without the sense of a question left unanswered.

There is still a paradox here. The same discipline that allows Crawford to step away cleanly is what makes the door behind him feel slightly ajar. He did not say he is done fighting. He said he is stepping away from competition. He framed it as winning “a different type of battle”. That sounds less like a farewell than a man protecting his peace.

If he never returns, his legacy is secure and agency intact. Every era produces a small handful of fighters whose contemporaries insist – stubbornly, forever – that no one could have beaten them. Terence Crawford is now one of those fighters. The argument alone is a kind of immortality. And if he does come back, it will not be because boxing demanded it. It will be because, somewhere in his mind, a new problem arose – and he decided he still wanted to solve it.

Chaos Outside the Ring: Terence Crawford Slammed With $1.5M Lawsuit in Shocking Jewelry Deal Dispute

Another day, another lawsuit. This time boxing icon Terence “Bud” Crawford is confronting a fresh legal challenge days after confirming his retirement. A New York jeweler has sued the undefeated champion, claiming he failed to deliver on a luxury goods promotion tied to his fights.

As reported by our good friends at TMZ, the civil action was filed Thursday in Manhattan Civil Court by Mazza New York. The retailer alleges Crawford visited its store in February 2024 and sought a $139,000 Patek Philippe Aquanaut watch. According to the complaint, Crawford proposed a $35,000 down payment and agreed to promote Mazza on his fight trunks to cover the remaining balance.

Mazza says it accepted the arrangement, delivered the watch, and expected its logo to be visible during Crawford’s bouts. The first attempt allegedly failed during Crawford’s August 2024 fight against Israil Madrimov, when the logo “had completely fallen off” by the fourth round.

READ MORE : Finally, After Reaching the Pinnacle: Terence “Bud” Crawford

The suit claims Crawford’s team acknowledged the issue and pledged to correct it for the next marquee event. But when Crawford faced Canelo Alvarez in September, Mazza says its branding never appeared despite months of coordination and the delivery of both physical and digital materials.

Terence Crawford

The jeweler estimates the lost exposure from the Alvarez fight at roughly $1.5 million, comparing the missed visibility to premium advertising during major sporting events. The lawsuit asserts claims of breach of contract, conversion, and unjust enrichment.

Crawford, 38, retired this week with a perfect 42-0 record. In a social media video announcing his decision, he said he was “walking away as a great with nothing else left to prove.”

A representative for Crawford did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. It remains unclear whether he plans to challenge the allegations or pursue a settlement.

“Not Beatable”- Eddie Hearn Names the Heavyweight Joshua Can’t Overcome

With Anthony Joshua threatening a meaningful resurgence in 2026, Eddie Hearn has named one man who could prove a step too far

The 36-year-old defeated internet star Jake Paul by sixth round stoppage on Friday, ending a near 15-month layoff at the Kaseya Center, Miami

After that victory, ‘AJ’ is now reported to face a credible opponent on a Riyadh Season show in early 2026, before targeting a more lucrative clash with Tyson Fury next summer.

But while Fury, who must first come out of retirement, seems like the preferred option, Joshua could alternatively look to become a three-time world champion next year.

A clash with former stablemate and newly-crowned WBO champion Fabio Wardley, for instance, could make a great deal of sense, especially when considering the terrific punching power that is typically generated by both men.

READ MORE :“There’s Way More Left” – Anthony Joshua Sends Powerful

Oleksandr Usyk, meanwhile, represents a far greater puzzle to solve, just as Joshua discovered following two points defeats to the Ukrainian in 2021 and 2022.

Anthony Joshua

Not only that, but with ‘AJ’ having now aligned himself to Team Usyk, it would appear that a trilogy encounter with the bona fide heavyweight king remains far from realistic.

But even so, the Brit’s promoter, Hearn, has admitted in an interview with Froch On Fighting that his client would likely lose to crafty southpaw once again.

“Could ‘AJ’ become the world heavyweight champion? In my opinion, he beats Fabio Wardley. So yes.

“Can he beat Oleksandr Usyk? No, at the moment. I don’t think he does.”

“Name the Price”: He will End It by Knockout, Frank Warren Claims Fury Will Face Anthony Joshua

The boxing world has been set alight once again after explosive comments from veteran promoter Frank Warren, who insists that a long-awaited heavyweight showdown between Tyson Fury and Anthony Joshua can still happen — but only under one condition. According to Warren, if the money is right, Fury won’t hesitate to step into the ring with Joshua, and when he does, the outcome will be emphatic.

“Name the price,” Warren reportedly said, making it clear that negotiations — not fear, timing, or legacy — are the only remaining obstacle. Even more provocatively, the promoter doubled down on his confidence, claiming Fury would not just beat Joshua, but knock him out.

Few fights in modern boxing have generated as much anticipation as Tyson Fury vs Anthony Joshua. For nearly a decade, fans have debated who would reign supreme in an all-British heavyweight clash that could define an era. Missed opportunities, stalled negotiations, surprise losses, and shifting titles have repeatedly delayed the bout, turning it into boxing’s most frustrating “what if.”

READ MORE : “There’s Way More Left” – Anthony Joshua Sends Powerful

Joshua, a former two-time unified heavyweight champion, rebuilt his career after crushing defeats to Andy Ruiz Jr. and Oleksandr Usyk. Fury, meanwhile, carved out his own legacy as the undefeated “Gypsy King,” dethroning Deontay Wilder and positioning himself as one of the most dominant heavyweights of his generation.

Despite both men occupying the top tier of the division for years, they have somehow never shared the ring — a fact that continues to haunt fans and fuel debate.

Anthony Joshua

Frank Warren Turns Up the Heat

Frank Warren’s latest comments have reignited that fire. As Fury’s long-time promoter, Warren has never shied away from bold statements, but this one landed with particular force. By saying Fury will fight Joshua “if he gets his price,” Warren framed the situation as brutally simple: pay Fury what he believes he’s worth, and the fight happens.

But it was the knockout claim that truly grabbed attention.

Warren’s confidence suggests he believes Joshua is tailor-made for Fury’s style — a dangerous assertion given Joshua’s proven power and championship pedigree. To Warren, however, Fury’s movement, size, ring IQ, and psychological warfare would overwhelm Joshua and lead to a decisive finish.

RELATED NEWS : Boxing: Controversy Erupts as Terence Crawford Is Stripped

Tyson Fury has never lacked belief. Known for his mind games and fearless predictions, Fury has repeatedly dismissed Joshua in interviews, often questioning his toughness and mentality. Warren’s comments appear to echo Fury’s own long-held view: that Joshua struggles under pressure and can be broken.

Joshua, on the other hand, is in a different phase of his career. After setbacks and criticism, he has embraced a quieter, more focused approach, intent on rebuilding confidence and sharpening his aggression. Supporters argue that a motivated, disciplined Joshua is more than capable of hurting Fury — and potentially ending the fight himself.

That contrast only adds to the intrigue. This isn’t just a clash of heavyweights; it’s a collision of personalities, philosophies, and legacies.

Terence Crawford

At this stage, money may be the deciding factor — but legacy looms just as large. For Fury, beating Joshua would silence doubters who claim he has avoided the fight. For Joshua, defeating Fury would be career-defining, potentially restoring him to the top of the heavyweight mountain.

Warren’s “name the price” challenge places pressure on promoters, broadcasters, and investors to finally make the bout unavoidable. With boxing fans growing increasingly impatient, the message is clear: the excuses are running out.

“There’s Way More Left” – Anthony Joshua Sends Powerful Warning to Terence Crawford

Anthony Joshua, like most of us, was stunned when Terence Crawford dropped the news.
The former three-division undisputed champion and five-division belt holder recently announced that he was hanging up the gloves.
Although he’s 38, Crawford looked like a man who wasn’t close to being done in his convincing victory over Canelo Alvarez to become an undisputed super middleweight champion on September 13. However, Crawford (42-0, 31 KOs) evidently has had enough.
Anthony Joshua wholeheartedly respects Crawford’s decision but doesn’t believe the future first ballot Hall of Famer should walk away just yet
The former two-time heavyweight champ spoke to Rick Reeno on the “Mr. Verzace Podcast” before his fight with Jake Paul on Friday.

READ MORE :Finally, After Reaching the Pinnacle: Terence “Bud” Crawford

“I feel like Terence Crawford has got so, so much more to give,” Joshua said. “But it’s not just physical, it’s what’s going on in his mind. He’s been in the game for a long time, so maybe he’s like, forget it, I’m done mentally, even though physically he’s good.”
Terence Crawford
While he accomplished more than most, Crawford still had plenty of options. For starters, Alvarez announced a desire to run things back in the second half of next year. And Jaron Ennis and Vergil Ortiz head a long list of notable potential foes who have repeatedly called him out.
Nevertheless, Crawford’s pugilistic cup is full as he now awaits that eventual call from the Hall. If he doesn’t get the itch to return, Joshua (28-4, 25 KOs) will be somewhat disappointed. With that said, he understands that Crawford has given his life to the sport and has earned the right to go out on his own terms.
“I would love to see him continue fighting,” Joshua said. “I think he’s got a lot left, but we have to live and let others live by their own rules.”

“I Was Pushed to the Edge” — Anthony Joshua breaks silence on year away from boxing ahead of Jake Paul fight as Fury showdown explodes

Anthony Joshua explains why he decided to take 12 months away from boxing following his knockout defeat to Daniel Dubois in September 2024; Joshua returned to the ring on Friday with a knockout win over Jake Paul in Miami, before calling out Tyson Fury once again

The two-time heavyweight world champion marked his return to the ring with a sixth-round knockout victory over YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul in Miami on Friday night.

Joshua immediately followed up the win by reiterating his desire to fight Tyson Fury in a long-awaited all-British showdown.

“I had a tough defeat in 2024 and I just want to pick up and move forward again,” said Joshua. “So yeah, I’m glad that I got back in the ring and I figured out that this is where I want to be.

READ MORE : Finally, After Reaching the Pinnacle: Terence “Bud” Crawford

“It was a real test for me to figure out if I still want to continue or not, and this was a good eye-opener that this is where I want to be, that I want to get back in the ring and go again.”

Joshua’s return was unorthodox, a bout between him and Paul emerging as one of the most controversial in the era of crossover clashes.

Terence Crawford

Nonetheless, Paul barely laid a glove on the former Olympic champion before suffering a double jaw-break from Joshua’s devastating finish.

“I needed to do better. I needed to do better,” said Joshua after the fight. “Yeah, it’s a win, but it’s not a success. I think my coach expects more from me, and I expect more from myself.

“But what can we do? We can’t reverse the clocks. I have to move forward. I have to put that in the past now.

“After today, you may see a bit of social media trying to lap up all of the algorithm attention, but for me, it’s in the past. I can’t live off of that win. I’ve got a lot of improvement I need to do. So, yeah, I’m not happy.”

Finally, After Reaching the Pinnacle: Terence “Bud” Crawford Calls It Quits

For over a decade, Terence “Bud” Crawford stood as one of boxing’s most complete, calculated, and quietly ferocious warriors. His journey from the rugged streets of Omaha, Nebraska, to the rarefied air of boxing immortality was one defined by discipline, precision, and an unwavering belief in his own greatness. And now, after achieving the ultimate distinction — undisputed champion in a *third* weight division — the man who once seemed unstoppable has chosen to stop on his own terms.

It’s official: Terence Crawford has retired from boxing.

A Farewell on His Terms

The news felt both shocking and poetic. In an era when great fighters often linger past their prime, seeking one last payday or one final glimpse of glory, Crawford instead chose peace over punishment. He walks away at the peak of his powers — undefeated, undisputed, and utterly unchallenged.

READ MORE : Boxing: Controversy Erupts as Terence Crawford Is Stripped

Like the final note in a perfect symphony, his career ends with flawless harmony.

“This was always part of the plan,” Crawford reportedly told those close to him. “You climb to the top of the mountain once. Doing it three times just confirmed I’m exactly who I said I was.”

Terence Crawford

And he’s right. What Crawford accomplished is almost impossible in modern boxing. To be undisputed in one weight class is a career-defining feat. To do it in two seems almost mythical. To capture all the belts in *three* divisions places him in a league of his own — a realm occupied only by the sport’s most sacred names.

From Omaha to the World

Crawford’s rise was never easy. Born in one of Omaha’s toughest neighborhoods, he faced challenges that might have broken lesser spirits. A street fight led to him being shot in the head in his early 20s, a moment that could have easily marked the end of his story. But for Crawford, it only sharpened his focus.

From those humble origins emerged a fighter of rare intellect and adaptability. In the ring, Crawford was a chess master with gloves, shifting from southpaw to orthodox seamlessly, dismantling opponents with precision rather than brute force. Each fight was a lesson in timing, patience, and ruthlessness. He could outbox you, outthink you, and if need be, outfight you.

RELATED NEWS : Gervonta Davis’ comeback opponent finally revealed, but it’s

By the time he unified the 140-pound division in 2017, Crawford had already begun carving his name into boxing history. But he wasn’t done. Moving up to welterweight, he made the difficult look effortless, capturing titles and silencing doubters one by one.

The Road to Immortality

The turning point — the moment that elevated him beyond great — came when he captured undisputed status in his third division. That win wasn’t just a triumph of fists and strategy; it was a statement, a declaration that greatness isn’t measured only in belts or records, but in the audacity to chase perfection.

Gervonta Davis

Crawford did what so few could: he left no doubt. No controversies, no unavenged losses, no “what ifs.” Every fighter he faced looked confident until they didn’t. His ability to switch stances mid-fight, to adapt instantly to an opponent’s rhythm, made him a nightmare in the ring. Observers often said Crawford never just won — he downloaded you, processed you, and broke you down piece by piece.

And then, just when the boxing world expected another megafight, another chapter, he announced the unthinkable: he was done.

A Legacy Beyond the Ropes

Crawford’s decision seems rooted not in exhaustion, but in fulfillment. He reached the mountaintop — not once, but three times. What more could he prove?

His career closes with an unblemished record, multiple Fighter of the Year honors, and near-universal recognition as one of the pound-for-pound best of his era — perhaps *the* best. Analysts will debate where he ranks among legends like Sugar Ray Leonard, Floyd Mayweather Jr., and Roberto Durán, but what’s undeniable is that Crawford’s resume stands shoulder-to-shoulder with theirs.

His influence extends beyond his accomplishments. For citizens of Omaha, he’s a hero, a role model who showed that greatness can emerge from the most unexpected corners. For fight fans, he’s a reminder of what boxing looks like when it’s art, not spectacle. And for his peers, he’s the template of what it means to leave the game untouched — still sharp, still whole, still proud.

The End of an Era

Boxing has always been a sport defined by cycles — dynasties rise, champions fall, and new faces fill the void. But figures like Terence Crawford don’t come often. His era was one of surgical precision, quiet dominance, and unflinching determination. Even in retirement, his presence will loom large over the division he ruled.

There’s something fitting about the way he chose to exit. No tears. No drawn-out farewell tour. Just a simple declaration: mission accomplished.

Terence “Bud” Crawford, the fighter who refused to be ordinary, has left the ring the same way he fought — on his own terms, without arrogance, without fear, and with a legacy that will echo through boxing history.

He may have hung up the gloves, but his story isn’t just ending. It’s crystallizing — becoming legend.

“He’s Just a Gatekeeper!” — Gervonta Davis Takes a Savage Shot at Lamont Roach

Lamont Roach may have given Gervonta Davis all he could handle, but ‘Tank’ doesn’t see anything special in the former junior lightweight champion.
Roach faced Isaac Cruz on Saturday in his first appearance since fighting Davis (30-0-1, 28 KOs) to a controversial draw on March 1 in Brooklyn’s Barclays Center. Initially, Davis agreed to an immediate rematch with Roach, before ultimately choosing to partake in an exhibition with Jake Paul. After more domestic violence allegations against Davis came to light, the Paul fight was scrapped.

READ MORE :Boxing: Controversy Erupts as Terence Crawford Is Stripped

At Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas, Roach (25-1-3, 10 KOs) was knocked down and fought a close contest with Cruz, settling for his second majority draw of the year. In the aftermath of the fight, Davis gave some very brief thoughts on Roach.
“He’s a gatekeeper,” Davis said on his X account. “That’s it.
Roach, 30, was forced to play catch-up against Cruz after touching the canvas in the third round. To his credit, he fought well in the pocket. Cruz, who lost a close decision to Davis in 2021, was deducted a point in the seventh after a kidney punch.
Terence CrawfordThis may not be the last time Cruz (28-3-2, 18 KOs) and Roach see each other in the ring. At the post-fight presser, they sat side-by-side. Each man stated their case for why the scorecards should have been in their favor. Nevertheless, in the midst of those discussions, they both agreed to a prompt rematch.
That sequel, however, will take time after it was revealed Roach suffered a broken right hand in the fifth round.